Chapter 30
Dr. Dixon’s voice came out of the darkness, “Are you hurt?”
Rob’s own voice sounded strange to him, “I guess I’m a little groggy.”
“Come in here.”
There were lights now and Rob was in a bedroom, plainly but comfortably furnished.
In a chair by a window, her hands tied behind the back of the chair, was Linda Carroll. Her ankles were tied to the legs of the chair, and Rob was conscious of the pallor of her face.
“Rob. Oh, Rob!” she said, and then was silent.
Lieutenant Tyler clicked on more lights.
Moose Wallington wrapped his big hand around the arm of the prisoner, said, “Don’t start anything now. You might get hurt.”
Dr. Dixon, moving across the room, said, “It’s all right, Miss Carroll,” and stooped to untie the knots which held her ankles to the legs of the chair. A moment later, he had brought out his knife and quickly cut the bonds which tied her wrists. “How are you? All right?”
“Yes,” she said. “I...” She laughed nervously, became silent.
Dr. Dixon said, “We’re State Police. Would you care to tell us...”
“I have nothing to say.”
Dr. Dixon’s face darkened. “You can’t afford to adopt that attitude, Miss Carroll. After all, it was your car that was used for smuggling.”
“I’m sorry, I have nothing to say. There’s no statement I care to make.”
Rob stepped forward. “I think I can tell you all the essential facts,” he said.
Dr. Dixon cocked a quizzical eyebrow at him, said, “The State Police were under orders to follow you when I let you out of my car. You probably didn’t know you were being shadowed, but you seemed to know just where to go and just what to do when you got here.”
Rob, somewhat crestfallen, said, “I suppose I should have confided in the police.”
“You didn’t need to,” Dr. Dixon said with a smile. “I think we know pretty generally what happened. I think our reasoning parallels yours, Rob, but I don’t know how you knew about this place and what you were going to find here.”
Rob said, “After all, it’s rather simple. There had to be some woman involved. Some woman who knew the people at that Swiss inn. Some woman who could count on easy access to the Rapidex sedan. I knew it wasn’t Linda Carroll. There was only one other person it could have been, Linda Mae. She locked up the desk that had the gun in it and gave a key to Ostrander. She always referred to it as the key, but it’s quite reasonable to suppose that there were two keys to that desk.”
“Of course there were,” Dr. Dixon said. “It’s the only explanation. I can appreciate that Miss Carroll dislikes to testify against her own family, but I think it will simplify matters if she’ll tell her story.”
“All right,” Linda said dispiritedly. “I guess there’s no use trying to conceal things any longer.
“My aunt has always been eccentric and decidedly unconventional. She has a certain amount of talent but a limited imagination. She can paint like nobody’s business, but she has a hard time finding things to paint.
“A year ago when she was over in Switzerland she found a very fine painting by some little-known Swiss artist. A painting of dawn on a lake, with a campfire by the lake and the smoke coming up in a straight shaft and then spreading out into a long, hazy cloud.
“Well, Linda Mae simply stole that picture. That is, she didn’t touch the painting itself, but she studied the composition, the coloring and the general theme of the painting. Then she came home and duplicated it and it was sold to a calendar company. That was her undoing, because the calendar attracted so much attention and was so popular that eventually a copy found its way into Switzerland and... well, the thing was hushed up, but people who were in a position to make or break an artist’s reputation learned about it.
“That was a terrific blow to Aunt Linda Mae. She was all set to really capitalize on the reputation that painting had made for her. I can appreciate something of the shock and how it must have thrown her off balance. She went to Europe. At the time I didn’t suspect a thing, but suddenly Aunt Linda Mae became exceedingly affluent. I suspected there might have been some smuggling, although I had absolutely no idea it could have been anything like drugs. I was thinking entirely in terms of jewelry.
“This year I decided I’d go to Europe. Somewhat to my surprise, Linda Mae made no attempt to accompany me, but she did insist that I stop at this inn and pay her compliments to Madame Charteux and her husband.
“Looking back on it, I can see it all now. Aunt Linda obviously decided to use me as a cat’s-paw. René Charteux was her accomplice in the smuggling. It was only necessary for him to get possession of the car for a few hours to weld a secret receptacle on the under part of the car which would hold enough dope to make a small fortune when it was smuggled into the United States and sold at retail.
“I presume that his wife had learned what he was doing and threatened to tell the police, which was the reason she suddenly succumbed to what apparently was a case of mushroom poisoning.
“I admit that I was dumb. I just didn’t put two and two together, even after Rob had told me about what he had found on the car. It wasn’t until after Rob was arrested and charged with murder that I suddenly realized what must have happened. And then I was too foolish to go to the police. I thought I could handle it.
“I tried to play it smart. I pretended that I was still completely unaware of all the sinister implications. I tried to treat Aunt Linda Mae just as though nothing had happened, and as though I knew nothing. But she’s cunning as a serpent. She must have read my mind. I think she knew almost the exact instant when I began putting two and two together. She insisted we should have a cup of tea. I realized the tea was drugged within five minutes of the time I had drunk it. I tried to hold on to my consciousness long enough to get to the telephone, but my legs seemed to turn to water and my hands were like lead. I simply couldn’t raise them. I collapsed in a heap on the floor and went to sleep.
“When I woke up I was here. I don’t know what Aunt Linda Mae intended to do with me finally. Perhaps she didn’t know.”
Dr. Dixon looked at Lieutenant Tyler.
Lieutenant Tyler said, “Well, I guess everything’s all right now. We’re going to have to ask you to come to Headquarters and make a report and we’ll want you to sign a statement.”
Linda said, “It’s not so much what I actually know as what I suspect. For instance, that night when Merton Ostrander and I arrived at the house, Aunt Linda Mae told us she’d been in bed. Her hair was down and her face was devoid of make-up, and... well, she fooled me. I really thought she had been in bed.”
Lieutenant Tyler frowned at Rob Trenton. “I still don’t see how you got in on this.”
Rob said, “After I analyzed Dr. Dixon’s testimony it was quite obvious that someone must have fired two bullets into Harvey Richmond’s body with the gun that I had in my possession when I left the boat. Since those bullets were fired after the fire was started they must have been discharged after the gun had been locked in the desk. There was simply no other way out of it.
“Then I began to do a lot of thinking. Some woman had to be mixed up with the gang. I had seen a woman at the time the fire started on the boat. I had heard of a woman aboard the boat prior to that time. There had been a woman who went with the man to dig up the buried dope. She had escaped and it must have been through her that the smugglers learned so promptly police had been waiting at the place where I had buried the smuggled shipment.
“I then remembered I had been all keyed up with excitement when I had reached Linda Mae’s house, yet she gave me a drink of hot milk and I almost immediately fell into a deep slumber and didn’t wake up until late the next morning. There must have been a drug in that hot milk.